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EPA Will Pay Companies $85 Million To Help Navajo Clean Up Uranium

uranium mine
Courtesy of the Navajo Nation Museum
Navajo miners near Cove, Ariz., dump tailings over the side of a mesa in 1952.

The EPA will pay environmental firms $85 million to assess the damage done by uranium mining companies over four decades. The agency announced the contract opportunities Aug. 31. 

During the height of the Cold War mining companies extracted nearly 30 million tons of uranium ore either on the Navajo Nation or adjacent to the reservation between 1944 and 1986. The federal government bought the ore to make atomic weapons. Those companies abandoned more than 400 mines. 

The government has tried to go after the polluters. The U.S. Justice Department’s recently sued Anadarko Petroleum for $1 billion to clean up 50 of those mines. A third of the mining companies have shut down or run out of money. 

Since 2008 the EPA has hauled away thousands of cubic yards of mine waste and has rebuilt about 50 contaminated homes. 

Laurel Morales was a Fronteras Desk senior field correspondent in Flagstaff from 2011 to 2020.